Pubdate: Thu, 04 Feb 2010 Source: Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) Copyright: 2010 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.winnipegsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/503 Author: Tom Brodbeck DRUG-DEN DISGRACE Call For Clean Syringes In Prison As 'Right' Is Absurd A new report on the evils of dirty needles among drug users in Canadian prisons says taxpayers should provide inmates with clean syringes because it's their human right to have access to them. The report is called Under the Skin and was penned by the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network. It offers no solutions on how to turn off the pipeline of drugs into federal penitentiaries and provides no advice on how to more effectively treat drug addicts behind prison walls. Instead, it says it's an inmate's "human right" to have clean syringes to inject illicit drugs and that forcing them to use dirty needles is a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. "Not only does this harm the health of people in prison and public health more broadly, but it is also a violation of the human rights of people in prison," the report says. "Everyone is entitled to human rights, and people do not surrender those rights when they enter prison." Good lord. So now it's a human right to do drugs in prison and a charter violation to deprive drug addicts of clean syringes? Give me a break. The report includes the testimonies of 50 inmates who say drug use is rampant in federal prisons and that shooting up is a regular activity behind prison walls. Well, isn't that the problem? The fact we still have prisons where Corrections officials are unable - or unwilling - to stop the pipeline of drugs flowing into their facilities? One of the main drivers behind crime is drug addiction, yet we continue to allow prisons to operate as shooting galleries. Why no recommendations in the report on how to solve that problem and eradicate drugs from prisons? If there's a drug problem in federal prisons, we shouldn't be talking about how to make drug use safer. We should be talking about how to make drug use non-existent. Prisons are supposed to be highly controlled environments. We're not talking about trying to eradicate drug use on the street. We're talking about enforcing a zero-tolerance policy in what should be a very controlled setting. Prisons should be giant rehab centres, not drug dens. Granted, the debate over trying to make prisons drug free is an old one. We hear government after government pledging to "crack down on drugs in prison" but it's usually more rhetoric than policy substance. And by all accounts, drug use remains rampant in federal prisons. There are countless stories - some confirmed, others not - on how drugs get into prisons. Contraband are tossed over barbed-wired fences in tennis balls, dead birds and other seemingly benign objects. Seriously, how hard could it be to stop that from happening? Some netting? A 100-metre no-standing zone outside prison walls? We hear stories about spotty security checks on family members entering prisons who bring drugs into the facility, including planting them on children. We even hear about prison staff being part of the supply chain. Yet, despite government rhetoric, very little is ever done about it. Instead, we get reports like this one that recommend we throw our hands in the air, accept drugs are part of prison life and give them all clean syringes. Next they'll recommend we buy them the drugs, too. What a joke. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D